Making Gay Okay: How rationalising homosexual behaviour is changing everything

Mar 3, 2016 by

From Family Education Trust:

Robert R. Reilly is a senior fellow of the American Foreign Policy Council, university professor, former broadcaster and professional actor, advisor to President Reagan and army officer, and a distinguished commentator on social, cultural and political issues. His latest book examines the homosexual agenda, how it became part of the mainstream of American society and traces the aggressive homosexual ‘march through the institutions’.

According to Reilly, the debate about homosexuality, and particularly about same-sex marriage, is, at its heart, a debate about the nature of reality. One side believes that things have a nature and purpose that make them what they are. The other side denies that things have an essential nature, and believes that things are nothing in themselves, and can be shaped according to personal choices and desires. Reilly examines the philosophical basis for these competing points of view.

Having established the philosophical bases for the opposing worldviews, he sets about comprehensively dismantling gay rights mythology. Drawing upon research evidence, he thoroughly discredits the idea that homosexual relationships are, in the words of Nick Clegg, ‘normal and harmless’. According to the American psychiatrist Jeffrey Satinover, the incidence of AIDS among homosexual men in their 20s and 30s is around 430 times greater than that of the heterosexual population at large.

While men who have sex with men are a tiny percentage of the population, they account for 72 per cent of syphilis cases, 79 per cent of HIV diagnoses among men and a significant percentage of other sexually transmitted infections. Reilly asks: ‘Why are there no warning labels?…How is it that there can be warning labels on cigarettes and alcohol, on almost every package of food…yet no cautionary admonitions regarding homosexual practices?’

Promiscuity

Reilly demonstrates that the image promoted by the gay lobby of the committed gay couple in a stable relationship is largely a myth. Less than 8 per cent of both male and female homosexual relationships can be described as ‘long-term’.

A study by two homosexual authors of 100 gay couples who had been together for five years or more, found that not a single one had maintained sexual fidelity. An Australian study of 2,583 sexually active homosexual men found that 82 per cent had had over 50 sexual partners while nearly 50 per cent had over 100. In the words of the influential journalist, broadcaster and homosexual rights activist, Michaelangelo Signorile: ‘For “gay” men, the term monogamy simply doesn’t necessarily mean sexual exclusivity.’

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